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Improving cascade outcomes for active TB: A global systematic review and meta-analysis of TB interventions

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PLOS MEDICINE
卷 20, 期 1, 页码 -

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PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1004091

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This study aimed to summarize the impact of various interventions on care cascade outcomes for active tuberculosis (TB). The findings showed that education and counseling, incentives, community-based interventions, and mixed interventions were associated with improved TB care cascade outcomes compared to standard-of-care. These interventions have significant implications for enhancing TB care outcomes.
BackgroundTo inform policy and implementation that can enhance prevention and improve tuberculosis (TB) care cascade outcomes, this review aimed to summarize the impact of various interventions on care cascade outcomes for active TB. Methods and findingsIn this systematic review and meta-analysis, we retrieved English articles with comparator arms (like randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and before and after intervention studies) that evaluated TB interventions published from January 1970 to September 30, 2022, from Embase, CINAHL, PubMed, and the Cochrane library. Commentaries, qualitative studies, conference abstracts, studies without standard of care comparator arms, and studies that did not report quantitative results for TB care cascade outcomes were excluded. Data from studies with similar comparator arms were pooled in a random effects model, and outcomes were reported as odds ratio (OR) with 95% confidence interval (CI) and number of studies (k). The quality of evidence was appraised using GRADE, and the study was registered on PROSPERO (CRD42018103331). Of 21,548 deduplicated studies, 144 eligible studies were included. Of 144 studies, 128 were from low/middle-income countries, 84 were RCTs, and 25 integrated TB and HIV care. Counselling and education was significantly associated with testing (OR = 8.82, 95% CI:1.71 to 45.43; I-2 = 99.9%, k = 7), diagnosis (OR = 1.44, 95% CI:1.08 to 1.92; I-2 = 97.6%, k = 9), linkage to care (OR = 3.10, 95% CI = 1.97 to 4.86; I-2 = 0%, k = 1), cure (OR = 2.08, 95% CI:1.11 to 3.88; I-2 = 76.7%, k = 4), treatment completion (OR = 1.48, 95% CI: 1.07 to 2.03; I-2 = 73.1%, k = 8), and treatment success (OR = 3.24, 95% CI: 1.88 to 5.55; I-2 = 75.9%, k = 5) outcomes compared to standard-of-care. Incentives, multisector collaborations, and community-based interventions were associated with at least three TB care cascade outcomes; digital interventions and mixed interventions were associated with an increased likelihood of two cascade outcomes each. These findings remained salient when studies were limited to RCTs only. Also, our study does not cover the entire care cascade as we did not measure gaps in pre-testing, pretreatment, and post-treatment outcomes (like loss to follow-up and TB recurrence). ConclusionsAmong TB interventions, education and counseling, incentives, community-based interventions, and mixed interventions were associated with multiple active TB care cascade outcomes. However, cost-effectiveness and local-setting contexts should be considered when choosing such strategies due to their high heterogeneity. Author summary Why was this study done? Developing new and innovative interventions to improve tuberculosis (TB) care services use and successful treatment are essential to the global efforts to end TB.There is a limited scope on the overall impact of these interventions because most studies focus on interventions' capacity to enhance specific TB care outcomes.Evaluating existing evidence to ascertain the effect TB interventions on overall care cascade outcomes is paramount to informing holistic TB control strategies What did the researchers do and find? We systematically reviewed and meta-analyzed evidence on TB interventions and their effects on the TB care cascade for active TB from 144 peer-reviewed studies.In this study, the 5 out of 12 identified TB interventions associated with multiple care cascade outcomes were education and counseling, incentives, digital interventions, community-based, multisector collaborations, and mixed interventions.Among LMIC studies, education and counseling, incentives, community-based interventions, and multisector collaborations were the interventions associated with at least three TB care cascade outcomes. What do these findings mean? A wide range of relatively simple interventions could substantially improve TB care outcomes.Multistep efficient interventions like education and counseling, incentives, and mixed interventions should be keenly considered in expanding active TB control programs.Researchers should revise multistage effective interventions to incorporate local context needs due to their high heterogeneity.

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